Rheumatoid Arthritis and Pregnancy Lansing MI

If you have rheumatoid arthritis and are considering having a baby, you're likely to have concerns. Will you pass the disease on to your baby? Will halting your meds make your arthritis worse? Which arthritis drugs will hurt your baby? We've got some answers for you on how to cope with rheumatoid arthritis and pregnancy.

Alane Marie Laws-Barker
(517) 364-6363
1100 W Saginaw St
Lansing, MI
Kelly Rose Menge
(517) 334-2121
401 W Greenlawn Ave
Lansing, MI
Terri Eugenia Younger-Eure
(517) 334-2195
401 W Greenlawn Ave
Lansing, MI
Bernard D Billman, DO
517-484-9000
2815 S Pennsylvania Ave
Lansing, MI
Sue C Tobin, DO
517-334-2363
401 W Greenlawn Ave
Lansing, MI
Luis Alberto Gonzalez
(517) 364-6363
1100 W Saginaw St
Lansing, MI
Stacey S Tremp
(517) 334-2195
401 W Greenlawn Ave
Lansing, MI
Valerie Elizabeth Levitt, MD
Lansing, MI
Gordon Walter Mc Neal, MD
517-367-5225
6465 Millennium
Lansing, MI
Andrew Franklin Zink
(517) 367-5300
401 W Greenlawn Ave
Lansing, MI
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Rheumatoid Arthritis and Pregnancy

If you have rheumatoid arthritis and are considering having a baby, you're likely to have concerns. Will you pass the disease on to your baby? Will halting your meds make your arthritis worse? Which arthritis drugs will hurt your baby? We've got some answers for you on how to cope with rheumatoid arthritis and pregnancy.

1. Controlling Rheumatoid Arthritis Before Pregnancy is Essential

Planning ahead makes a difference to your rheumatoid arthritis and pregnancy. To feel your best during pregnancy and after your baby is born, get your arthritis under control as much as possible before becoming pregnant, advises the University of Washington Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine (UW Medicine). Maintain close contact with your rheumatologist, obstetrician and physical therapist and follow your treatment program diligently before, during, and after pregnancy.

2. Pregnancy May Improve or Worsen Rheumatoid Arthritis

Research shows that about 70 percent of women with rheumatoid arthritis go into remission when they're pregnant. Symptoms generally begin to improve or, in some cases disappear, from about the third trimester. For the other 30 percent arthritis symptoms stay the same or may become worse.

The jury's still out on why these changes in rheumatoid arthritis occur during pregnancy. Some suspected causes are changes in estrogen, or a change in the mother's immune system to protect the baby. Regardless of the reason, expectant mothers who go into remission view it as a blessing, especially as being pregnant will require going off certain drugs that help to relieve the painful symptoms of arthritis...

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